Articles about interesting projects and experiments, such as the glowing plant

Articles about tools, both those you buy and those you build

Visits to DIYbio laboratories

Profiles of key people in the community

Announcements of events and other items of interest

Safety pointers and tips about good laboratory practice

Anything that’s interesting or useful: you tell us!

And BioCoder is free (for the time being), unless you want a dead-tree version. We’d like BioCoder to become self supporting (maybe even profitable), but we’ll worry about that after we’ve got a few issues under our belt.

If you’d like to contribute, send email to BioCoder@oreilly.com. Tell us what you’d like to do, and we’ll get you started.

Chapter 1Afineur

Chapter 2Marketing Synthetic Biology

Awareness

Investigation

Acceptance Engagement

Retention

Advocacy Creativity

Chapter 3Crowdsourcing a Language for the Lab

Chapter 4FlySorter

Why Sort?

Is This Even Possible?

Making Stuff

Close, But...

A New Strategy

What’s Next?

Chapter 5Standards for Protocols: The Quickest Way to Reproducibility

What Is a Standardized Protocol?

Standards

Open Science, Open Protocols

Collaborative Protocols

Future Directions

Conclusion

Chapter 6Vertical Farming and the Revival of the California Exurbs

Introduction

Vertical Farming: A New, Old Technology

Vertical Farming Illustrated: the Vertical Harvest Project

Other Reasons to Do Vertical Farming

The Central Valley and Delta: Regions in Search of a New Regional Economy

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O'Reilly Media, Inc. spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, research, and conferences. Since 1978, O'Reilly has been a chronicler and catalyst of leading-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and galvanizing their adoption by amplifying "faint signals" from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism.